Tough times dim Wall Street's honeymoon with Obama
By Herbert Lash - Analysis
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street's honeymoon with President-elect Barack Obama appears to be under strain just five trading days into the New Year and putting a damper on the outlook for stocks in 2009.
After plunging to an 11-year low in November, stocks have rallied about 20 percent on enthusiasm over Obama's picks for his economic team, and hopes his planned stimulus package would end the U.S. recession by the second half of this year.
But a gloomy private sector jobs report, dire warnings from corporate America, Federal Reserve worries about deflation and a bleak U.S. budget outlook this week rekindled investor fears that the recession will be far more severe than expected.
"I think we're torn between optimism (about) the new administration and stimulus plans and the awful economic outlook," said Frank Lesh, a futures analyst and broker at FuturePath Trading LLC in Chicago.
The Dow fell but most stocks rose on Thursday as Obama sought to rally support for a massive fiscal stimulus package by warning that without bold action the U.S. recession -- already looming as the worst since World War II -- could drag on for years.
Aides have previously said they are discussing $775 billion in stimulus but Obama did not give a dollar figure in a speech on the economy at George Mason University in Washington.
The speech offered scant details about the stimulus plan and failed to meet Wall Street's expectations.
The first five trading days of January are often an early sign of how the year will end, according to the Stock Trader's Almanac. Continued...




